Jim Nasby <jim.na...@bluetreble.com> writes: > On 5/22/15 2:44 PM, Andrew Dunstan wrote: >> Still I'd rather not add yet another parameter to the function, and I >> certainly don't want to make throwing an error the only behaviour.
> If instead of a create_missing boolean it accepted an enum we could > handle both (since they're related). But I'd also like to avoid Yet More > Knobs if possible. > I think there's essentially two scenarios for JSON usage; one where you > want to be pretty paranoid about things like keys aren't missing, you're > not trying to access a path that doesn't exist, etc. The other mode > (what we have today) is when you really don't care much about that stuff > and want the database to JustStoreIt. I don't know how many people would > want the stricter mode, but it certainly seems painful to try and > enforce that stuff today if you care about it. ISTM that the use case for JSON is pretty much JustStoreIt. If you had strict structural expectations you'd probably have chosen a more relational representation in the first place ... or else XML, which at least has heard of schemas and validation. So I definitely agree that we need the no-error case, and am not that excited about having an error-throwing variant. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers